Dark-Boy

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THE DARK BOY
AUGUST DERLETH
MRS. JUDITH TIMM CAME TO TEACH AT DISTRICT NO. 9 well past the mid-term, and not without
some trepidation. Just before setting out, she had had a brief, anonymous note which said only,
“Don’t come.” She was sure it had been sent by her predecessor, but that lady had gone by the
time she arrived; so she settled down a little uneasily with two spinsters, Miss Abigail Moore and
her sister, Miss Lettie, who lived just down the road from the schoolhouse. Like most of the
parents of children who came to school at No. 9, they were uncommunicative people.
But they were pleasant enough. And the school was pleasant, if a little old-fashioned, still,
with its lamplight instead of electricity. But then, few of the farms in this isolated part of the
country had electricity, and the schoolhouse had less use for it than the farms did. Miss Abigail,
who was on the Board of Education, was as tall and gaunt as her sister was short and plump; she
explained that Miss Mason, who had been teaching at No. 9, was a nervous woman, and not well.
“Nervous as a cat,” she said. “It fair gave one the creeps, it did. I don’t think she liked children.
She was younger than you, and, of course . . .”
“I never had any children,” said Mrs. Timm. “My husband died not long after we were
married.”
“But you’re not so old,” protested Miss Lettie.
Oh, yes, I am, thought Mrs. Timm. Desperately old. “I’m thirty.”
“Well, the real young ones don’t have any sense, and that’s a fact,” said Miss Abigail
primly. “I’ve never known it to fail. You like the schoolhouse?”
“Yes. It’s airy and has a good many windows.”
“We had them put in. Of course, we don’t have the electricity but then we don’t use it
much at night, you see, and we have to keep the expenses down.”
They seemed eager to help, despite a natural reserve. But there was something unspoken in
the air. Mrs. Timm did not want to ask about the anonymous warning she had received. She
could wait and bide her time. She had a cozy room downstairs in the old house where the sisters
lived; from it, she could look right down the road and see the schoolhouse past the long row of
old soft maples which were now in late March in the full of their yellow and maroon blossoms,
with the first leaves just beginning tenderly to uncurl.
The schoolhouse was of red brick. It must have been fifty years old. But the women of the
district had kept it immaculate inside, and the men who could use tools had kept it up; so it
looked older outside than in. She had seventeen children, spread through all the grades, and
three more who came irregularly, since they were needed at home to help in the fields, now that
the land was opening up once more after the winter. The children were all from the old families;
it seemed there were no others. There were Perkinses, Browns, Potters, Fields, Mahans, Jefferses,
Moores, and not a name that wasn’t English in origin. The children were attentive; if anything,
they were a little too grave with a gravity she attributed to their natural tendency to wait until
time betrayed the nature of their new teacher.
“I hope I won’t disappoint you after Miss Mason,” she said on her first day.
They did not seem to need her assurance; they seemed quite willing to take her on her own
terms, and despite their watchful gravity, she was inspired with more confidence than she
thought she would have. She ordered them all in her mind, marshalling them into groups and
grades so that she would soon know where each belonged, and on the evening of her first day at
school, she discussed the children with the spinsters Moore, who told her about their
backgrounds.
“How many have you again?” asked Miss Abigail.
“Seventeen—and then the three they say come from time to time.”
A glance flickered between the sisters.
She enumerated them, one after another, and came out with sixteen. “That’s funny,” she
said, “I seem to have forgotten one’s name. He’s the dark boy in the fourth grade, I think.”
“Oh, yes,” said Miss Lettie. “I think, sister, it’s coming on for rain tonight. Shall we close
the shutters?”
“But the moon’s shining.” protested Mrs. Timm.
“I feel rain,” said Miss Lettie.
Mrs. Timm did not close the shutters over the windows of her room. Moonlight flooded the
earth outside, and the night was warm. Not a cloud was in the sky. When Mrs. Timm stood at the
window of her darkened room just before getting into bed, she looked down to where the
moonlight gleamed from the schoolhouse windows. Was someone prowling about there? she
wondered. Or was this not, after all, her responsibility? She decided that it was not and got into
bed.
The schoolhouse gave no evidence of vandalism next morning. She reflected that in this
quiet country, fears for the safety of the building from nightwalkers were groundless. She settled
down to count her charges as they came in—sixteen. The dark boy was missing. Perhaps he, too,
had had to help out at home. If it were possible to hold classes in the evening, it might assure
more of the country boys a modicum of education.
That evening she returned to the schoolhouse after supper. Curiously, the spinsters sought
to dissuade her. Miss Mason had not done it. Before her, Mr. Brockway had not done it. There
ought not to be so much work. Perhaps the Board of Education could make it lighter. Their
assiduity was pathetic and absurd.
“I like to work,” said Mrs. Timm. “It keeps my mind off other things.”
“What other things?” asked Miss Abigail bluntly, her dark eyes keen on her.
“Myself,” said Mrs. Timm simply.
Could I say to them, I am thirty, I don’t feel old, I wish I had a home and children of my
own? Could I say to them each time I see them I ask myself whether I will be like they are in
another twenty or thirty years? But the answer was surely self-evident. The Moore sisters were so
inured to habit that even the departure of someone else from custom disturbed them; they
viewed her going with misgivings plain on their homely faces.
She set out for the school while it was yet dusk; the evening air was filled with the spring
carols of birds; the wind blew softly out of the west, aromatic with the smell of earth freed once
more from winter. A moon burgeoned into the darkening heavens and the evening star shone
low in the west. The schoolhouse was set in a grove of tall maple trees, “sugar maples,” the
country people called them; they bowered the small building and the dusk clung about them.
She went to work compiling neat records for every pupil, an onerous but not difficult task.
The lamp threw a pale yellow flower of light over the worn old desk. “Birch, Mary,” she wrote,
and followed her name with her age, the name of her parents, and other pertinent data. She
worked rapidly, and presently she was well into the fourth grade. Then she remembered the dark
boy who had not been in school today. She would have to leave a blank card for him. She went
on.
But the thought of the dark boy haunted her. He had been so quiet, so withdrawn, and yet
there had been such an appealing air about him, like someone lost. Despite the winsomeness of
the smaller children, this boy of nine or so touched upon her long-suppressed maternal instincts
as none other did.
She was aware presently of being watched. Looking up, she saw a face peering in from the
darker side of the school building, that side opposite the moon which opened toward a woods of
some depth, beyond which lay the home of one of her irregular pupils, a small boy named
Edward Robb. In a moment the face was gone. She was briefly alarmed, but almost
simultaneously she realized that the face was that of a boy.
The face reappeared. She looked steadily in its direction and saw that it was faintly
familiar—the slight, sensitive mouth, the dark brooding eyes, the curled hair, the scar on his
forehead, over the left temple. The dark boy, of course. He had finished his work and had been
drawn to the light in the schoolhouse. She half rose, beckoning him in; but he was off like a deer,
too shy to be drawn in at this unusual hour.
He did not return.
When she got back home, she found Miss Abigail waiting up for her. The old lady was
clearly apprehensive and studied her face as if she were looking for some sign of travail.
“I waited up because I didn’t know but what you might want something to eat when you
came in,” said Miss Abigail.
“No, I think not, thank you.”
“Well, there’s hot tea, if you want some.”
“If it’s ready, I’d like a cup.”
“I thought you would.”
When they were seated in the spare kitchen, the older woman asked, “How did the work
go?”
“Very well.”
“As long as you weren’t disturbed, I suppose you made good progress.”
Was it a question that the older woman asked? It sounded more like that than a statement.
“Oh, one of the boys looked into the window while I was at work, but he didn’t come in.”
The older woman’s eyes were intense on her. “Which one?” she asked in a voice that was
little more than a whisper.
“That dark boy—I’ve forgotten his name. It takes a while, you know, to get used to pupils
in a new school.”
The older woman’s gaze lingered. What was brooding in her eyes gave way to an uncertain
tranquility. She drank her tea slowly.
“It must be lonesome working there at night. I don’t expect you’ll have to do much more of
it, will you?”
Was it a simple question she asked, or was it a plea she made? Mrs. Timm was
disconcerted; she could not tell.
“I don’t know,” she said. “I don’t think so.”
The older woman concealed her relief well.
It was strange, thought Mrs. Timm when she was once again in her room, but the solicitude
of the spinsters was almost parental. She found herself responding to it, with the response of one
long in need of affection. It was understandable that they should be lonely, too, living isolated
here, their farm land rented to a neighbor who seldom came in, limited in their social life to the
few events which took place in the neighborhood.
On the following day, school had hardly begun when she answered a knock on the door
and found herself facing a dark-eyed, black-haired man in his middle thirties, holding one of her
irregulars by one hand.
“You the new teacher?” he asked bluntly.
“Yes, I’m Mrs. Timm.”
“I’m Tom Robb. Brought my boy over. Don’t care much about his comin’ to school, but the
law says he’s to come; so here he is. I need him some days. He won’t be regular.”
“Of course, I understand.” She turned to the boy. “This is Edward, isn’t it?”
“Yes, it’s Edward. And I don’t want him on any ladders, understand.”
What a peculiar request! she thought fleetingly. “I don’t think we’ll have to put Edward on
a ladder, Mr. Robb,” she said.
She met his eyes squarely. There was something in them, too, which baffled her. Perhaps it
was this wall of mystery which had disturbed her predecessor. His eyes burned at her; he looked
a little wild, resentful, brooding—all this lay in his eyes, together with a kind of defiant misery.
She opened the door wider. Would you like to come in, Mr. Robb?”
He was startled and surprised. “No, thank you, ma’am.” He relinquished his son’s hand
and pushed him forward a little. “You just take Edward now. He’ll come home directly school’s
over.” Hesitantly, he added, “You’ll have to overlook things now and then.”
“If Mrs. Robb. . . .”
“The boy’s mother died three years ago.”
“Oh, I’m sorry, Mr. Robb.”
“That’s all right, ma’am. You couldn’t know.”
“It’s the same way with me,” she hastened to add in expiation. “My husband died, too, six
years ago.”
He smiled wintrily.
Not until after he was gone did she think about his resemblance to the dark boy. Perhaps
his name, too, was Robb. The man, clearly, had some prejudice against education; it stood out in
his defiant, resentful manner. He had not been discourteous, as if he recognized that she only
represented a system he disliked, and was not herself the author of it. But he did not seem an
uneducated man, and his dislike was inexplicable. He was a man not ill-favored in appearance,
she thought on reflection, but, like his son, he needed caring for. Or is it my imagination? she
asked herself.
That night again, the dark boy looked in at her. All day he had been absent; but so had
three other boys in the upper grades. She knew they had had to take advantage of the balmy
weather and work in the fields. Doubtless the dark boy, for all that he could not be more than
nine or ten at most, had done so, too.
This time she slipped out the door when he moved back, so that when he moved up to the
window once more, she was there beside him almost before he knew it. His dark face looked up
at her out of the night.
“Won’t you come in?” she asked.
He followed her silently, but did not go far beyond the door, keeping away from the light.
There he stood, gazing after her with his brooding eyes.
“I’ve been looking back into the records,” she said, “and I guess your name is Joel, isn’t it?”
He nodded.
“You’ve been in the fourth grade two years,” she said gently.
He nodded again.
“Wouldn’t you like to learn faster, Joel?”
“Oh, yes,” his voice came in an urgent hushing.
He is as shy as a deer, she thought. Her glance fell upon the scar on his forehead. It was
angry, still, as if but half-healed.
“How did you hurt yourself?” she asked.
But almost instantly, almost as if he himself had answered, she knew how he had come by
it.
“You fell off a ladder, didn’t you?” she asked. “Here in school?”
He nodded.
Certainly he was Tom Robb’s son. Perhaps it was because of what that resentful man had
told her that she had known so surely what had happened to Joel. He had been hurt badly, so
much was clear. His hurt was part of his father’s withheld fury, the pent-up anger against
schooling, the wild defiance that shone in his eyes.
At the same time she was aware of something more—a kind of hunger emanating from the
boy. It touched her. He needed affection, he needed the care of the mother who had died, he
needed more than his father’s anger at destiny and his resentment. He needed it desperately, as
were it something to keep him from his solitude and isolation. Her maternal instincts welled up.
“Come closer, Joel,” she said persuasively.
He took a hesitant step forward, but he was trembling, poised for instant flight.
“Are you afraid of me?” she asked.
He shook his head.
“I’m not afraid of you,” she said. “I can teach you. If you can’t come day-times, I can teach
you at night.”
She stood up. Instantly he turned and was gone like the wind. The door yawned blackly
where but a moment before he had passed; the moonlight lay on the floor as if no shadow but
that of the trees had obscured it even for a moment.
She ran to the door, calling him. But no sound answered her save the wind’s hushing in the
maple trees, and far down the road a dog barking, a cow lowing.
When she reached home, the hour was late. She had waited in vain for the dark boy to
return; he had not come. Yet she could have taken oath that she had seen his face peering in at
her from time to time, that he had been skulking along behind her on her way from the
schoolhouse.
Despite the lateness of the hour, both the Moore sisters were still up. They sat in a kind of
tension which seemed to abate a little as soon as she was in the house and it was manifest that
she had come to no harm. She was touched.
“You shouldn’t have waited up,” she chided them gently. “You make me feel guilty to
keep you waiting.”
“Not at all,” said Miss Abigail. “We just wanted to make sure. After all we have our
responsibilities.”
“And we don’t take them lightly,” added Miss Lettie, her pale blue eyes fluttering.
“It’s such a quiet, peaceful night,” she said.
“And you weren’t disturbed?” inquired Miss Lettie anxiously.
She laughed. “Who would disturb me?” Then, casually, she added, “Except, of course, that
fourth grade boy. Think of it, two years in one grade! Does his father keep him at work so much
he can’t come to school enough to pass? I should think the law . . .” She stopped, amazed at the
grimness of Miss Lettie’s stare, a grimness more artfully concealed by Miss Abigail.
“What boy?” asked Miss Lettie in a voice that squeaked with anxiety
“That dark boy—I’ve forgotten his name. But he looks like Tom Robb; he must be one of
his boys. Or his brother, if he has one.”
“Oh!” cried Miss Lettie. “I told you, Abbie! You’ll have to move the schoolhouse. You’ll
have to get a new place.”
“Hush, Lettie! Go on, Mrs. Timm.”
“I did manage to get him in tonight, and I talked with him a little. He seems so pathetically
eager for attention and affection, but he’s so shy! I suppose he misses his mother. His father . . .”
Miss Lettie got up, her handkerchief pressed against her mouth. She left the room, her eyes
wild.
Mrs. Timm was amazed. She looked toward Miss Abigail.
“Whatever have I said?”
“You must overlook my sister’s emotionalism, Mrs. Timm,” said Miss Abigail in an
unsteady voice. “Did the boy speak to you?”
“Only a little. He answered most of my questions with a nod—just as if, why, as if he were
afraid to speak.”
“Mrs. Timm, may I ask you a question? I don’t want to seem impertinent . . .”
“Why, of course.”
“Did you know Miss Mason?”
“No.”
“Did you ever speak to her, or correspond with her?”
“No, I didn’t. But, wait . . .”
Now was the time, Mrs. Timm thought, the time to inquire about the anonymous note she
had received. She went hurriedly to her room and came back with it. She laid it down before Miss
Abigail, whose eyes lowered to it.
“I don’t know who sent it,” explained Mrs. Timm. “I thought it might have been Miss
Mason.”
“Yes. It looks like her handwriting.” Miss Abigail folded the note and handed it back to
Mrs. Timm. “Poor woman! Perhaps we did her an injustice.”
Mrs. Timm was more mystified than ever. She was beginning to feel a guilty bond of
sympathy with Miss Mason. There was no explanation of the mysterious conduct of the spinsters;
it baffled her. She sat for a long time in the moonlit room which was her own and sought some
solution to the riddle. There was none; she sank only deeper into perplexity. If all the people of
this rural community were as strange as the Moore sisters and Tom Robb, she could understand
why a sensitive young woman such as Miss Mason must have been could not have stood up
against them. How tense, how strange they all were! As if they labored under some problem
which was insoluble.
In the morning she sought in vain for any sign of the sisters’ nocturnal distress. She set out
for school earlier than usual because she had made up her mind that something must be done for
the dark boy; he must be helped, and there was only one way in which to do it. She herself must
talk to Tom Robb.
She found him in his barn. He had just finished milking and the cows had been turned out.
He had no sooner caught sight of her than he spoke, his voice cutting across her “Good morning,
Mr. Robb.”
“I need Ed myself today,” he said. “He can’t come.”
“It wasn’t Edward I came to see you about,” she answered. “I wanted to talk to you about
your older boy—the one with the scar on his forehead. Joel.”
He dropped the pail he had in his hand. In one great stride he loomed immediately before
her, his eyes blazing. He caught hold of her arms and shook her savagely, shouting at her, “What
are you talking about? Why are you tormenting me like this? Why can’t people leave us alone!”
in a voice that was wild with despair and grief and anger.
She was too astonished and frightened to protest. She was passive in his grasp, recognizing
instantly that there was no wriggling out of his strong hands. His temper passed; he let go of her,
put one hand up to his forehead, and fell back a step, breathing hard.
“Sorry,” he muttered thickly. “I guess I lost control.”
She repressed her indignation at the sight of his eyes; there were tears there. She forgot her
bruised arms.
“What have I said, Mr. Robb?”
He turned his eyes full upon her, suspicion rising in his sober gaze. “Don’t you know?” he
asked. “Didn’t they tell you?”
“No one hereabouts tells me anything,” she said simply.
“Didn’t they tell you my boy, Joel, fell off a ladder in the school-house and cracked open
his head? It started to heal over—but it never did. He died two years ago. Ed’s all I got left.” His
voice was chokingly hoarse.
For a piercing moment she thought the floor would give way under her. She fought for
control.
She put one hand on his arm. “I’m sorry. I didn’t know. But it explains everything. I’ve
seen him.”
“I have, too. What can I do?”
“You’re afraid of him,” she said simply.
He nodded dumbly, his eyes miserable.
“I guess maybe that’s the trouble,” she said. “He comes every night when I’m at the
schoolhouse. Perhaps it’s a mistake to be frightened.”
But it was only his patent misery and need that held down her own chill fear. Once out of
sight of the snug little Robb home, where he could not see her, she leaned breathlessly against a
tree. There was no dark boy, she said to herself. Somehow, her imagination had played a
dreadful trick on her. Dead two years! They had never taken his name off the records. Just
stopped in the middle of the fourth grade. No dark boy! She repeated it over and over to herself.
But she could not convince herself. That first day he had been sitting in the corner seat. She
remembered asking him his name; he had not given it. She remembered asking another boy, who
only looked toward the seat and shook his head. How grave the children had been that day! And
each night . . . Oh, no, it could not be!
When she returned to the Moore house for supper that evening, she was determined to face
the spinsters with her discovery.
“Why didn’t anyone tell me the schoolhouse was haunted?” she asked quietly.
“Oh!” cried Miss Lettie, looking accusingly at her sister. “I told you, Abbie…”
“Hush, Lettie,” said Abigail with authority. “Is it?” she asked Mrs. Timm.
“The dark boy, Joel Robb. You knew.”
Miss Abigail shook her head. “No, I didn’t know. I’ve never seen him. Neither has Lettie.
It’s only what we’ve heard. Only a very few people have seen him. Miss Mason said she did.
After that, Mr. Robb confessed he did. Perhaps we have done both of them a grave wrong,
because you couldn’t have known. We made sure Miss Mason was gone before you came. But
that first day, of course, the children reported that you spoke to an empty seat—that was why,
you see, we were so apprehensive. I suppose you will want to leave.”
She spoke with regret.
Mrs. Timm’s first impulse was to say yes, she wanted to go. But she did not give it voice.
“No,” she said. “I have no intention of leaving. If Mr. Robb has lived with that ghost for two
years, I guess it won’t harm me any. I’ll try to be more careful in front of the children, and we’ll
just say no more about it.”
The two old women looked at her with no attempt to conceal their incredulity.
How could I have been so tranquil? she asked herself later, as she sat in the moonlit
schoolhouse, waiting. She knew he would come. He must come now. But she had to fight down
her fear; it was only natural that she should wait now with trepidation and anxiety. The wind in
the maples, lashing the thin twigs high up heaven; the occasional clouds which shadowed the
moon; the isolation and loneliness of the countryside; the night’s deep silence all combined to
supplant the afternoon’s somnolence with eeriness.
Quite suddenly he was there, his face at the window, the scar black against the night.
This was the test, she knew. For a moment she hesitated. Then she smiled and raised her
hand to beckon him in.
He came in as before, slipping silently into the dimly-lit room to stand shyly near the door.
“Hello, Joel,” she said easily. “Did you come to learn tonight?”
He nodded.
“Sit down.”
He went back to the corner seat, the same seat in which she had first seen him. There he sat,
almost invisible in the shadows.
“Shall we read a story tonight, Joel?” she asked.
Did he answer “Yes” or not? She could not be sure. But with each word she uttered, her
uneasiness diminished a little and finally fell away from her, and the affection she had felt for this
lost ghost returned. She read to him, interrupting herself from time to time to speak to him
directly She finished a story, and went on to another.
The door, which had stood ajar, for the night was warm, swung open a little farther. She
looked up.
Tom Robb stood there, his hands clenched at his sides, his face turned to the corner seat.
“Your father’s come to take you home, Joel,” she said quietly and closed her book.
A half-strangled exclamation came from Tom Robb.
She bent over and blew out the lamp. In a moment the reflected glow of the moonlight lit
the room.
She stood up.
The boy sat where he was.
She walked down and over to where Tom Robb stood. She put her hand in his and turned
to the corner where the dark boy sat.
“Will you come home with us, Joel?” she asked.
She felt, rather than saw him glide out of the seat toward them. She held out her hand. She
felt the man at her side begin to shrink away, and tightened her hold on his rough fingers.
“Please, Tom,” she said.
He relaxed.
The boy came on slowly, hesitantly, fearfully. He came almost to where they stood; there
he stopped.
She turned without a word and walked out of the schoolhouse, still holding to Tom Robb’s
hand. Without looking around, she knew the boy was following.
In this fashion they walked through the wood back to the farm in the valley beyond, she
and the stumbling man and the evanescent boy who had once walked this way like any other
growing child.
At the house he was gone.
Robb flung himself into the house, exhausted. He sat down at the kitchen table, put his
head down on his arms, and sobbed.
“Two years of it,” he cried. “It like to drove me crazy. They all said I was crazy—every one
of ’em. They ran Miss Mason out. They’ll run you out the same way, you’ll see.”
She stood for a moment looking compassionately down at him. She put one hand gently on
his thick dark hair. How soft it was! And inside, he, too, was soft, she knew.
“I’d better go now,” she said.
He turned and grasped one of her hands. “Don’t go, Mrs. Timm!” he cried.
“I must,” she said quietly. “But nobody’s going to run me out. I aim to stay. I expect to be
back here.”
“They’ll say you’re crazy, too. They’ll say you’re off your head.”
“Then that’ll make two of us,” she said tranquilly.
He looked past her to the windows. “Has he gone?” he asked.
“If you could just get used to not being afraid of him,” she said, “you’d never notice him. I
did, before I knew. Now that I know, it doesn’t make any difference. He’s just lonesome. And so
are you. And, if it comes down to it, so am I. Most people are. After all, you’re his father; he’s got
a right to look for some affection from you. I must go now, Tom.”
He looked at her with challenge and wonder in his eyes. “You called me ‘Tom!’”
“You’d better get used to it,” she said. “Good-night.”
Outside there was nothing but the moonlight.
He came out after her. “I can’t let you walk home alone, Mrs. Timm,” he said gruffly. “If
you don’t mind, I’ll walk you back.”
“I don’t mind at all,” she answered.
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